Sentence examples similar to averse side from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

The phrase "averse side" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It seems to be an attempt to describe a side that is opposed or resistant to something, but it is not a standard expression.
Example: "On the averse side of the argument, many experts believe that the risks outweigh the benefits."
Alternatives: "opposing side" or "resistant side".

Similar(59)

"It appears that Nelle, as her friends call her, is very much with it, that she is still lucid and that her acerbic, press-averse side is fully intact," he wrote for Al.com.

Hannah had taken this in her stride, though she was painfully shy and constitutionally averse to the side effects of fame.

With the goalposts lurching drunkenly in the gales and neither side averse to adding a few fresh chapters to this fixture's tempestuous recent history, Leicester had their forwards to thank for establishing a platform which, despite the odd wobble, proved sufficiently stable to gain due reward for perhaps their best performance of the season.

Nor are the Lib Dems wholly averse to supply-side economics (though earlier this week Vince Cable, the business secretary, did a heroic job of signalling scepticism about a package to deregulate employment law that he himself had just unveiled).

For her part, Taylor has signaled an interest in politics, considering both a nomination to head the F.D.I.C. in 2006 and a campaign for United States Senate in 2010, but these days seems decidedly averse to a position on the federal side.

In a climate where the sovereign debt crisis still rages on in Europe, many people are becoming even more risk-averse, erring on the side of caution.

Scared for a week before playing Leicester, blubbing like a baby coming home from South Africa, this is a man not averse to revealing his vulnerable side.

(I almost wept last week at the tale of a friend whose kitchen-averse family made only one side dish at Thanksgiving: mashed potatoes or sweet potatoes, never both).

Cleanliness certainly had its dark side: the soap-averse Inquisition used the fact that Jews and Moors were "known to bathe" as evidence against them, while at least one 18th-century British doctor dismissed warm baths as a "luxury borrowed from the effeminate Asiatics".

If anything, Clippet's conversational tone currently comes across as too risk averse, treading a straight line between the sides of arguments in order to maintain that friendly tone of voice.

Moreover, regulators tend to be very risk averse and prefer erring on the more conservative side when it comes to managing water levels.

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